Differences between 77' and 78' US 308's | FerrariChat

Differences between 77' and 78' US 308's

Discussion in '308/328' started by tommott77, Jul 5, 2009.

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  1. tommott77

    tommott77 Formula Junior

    Feb 1, 2009
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    I am contemplating the purchase of a 77' GTB at the moment and was curious if someone could firm up the differences between the 77' and 78' model years. I have seen that the 77' US 308's were rated at 240hp while the 78's were rated down to 205. That is a big difference and I am trying to account for what changes led to the decrease in power starting 1978. So can someone please confirm if I have these points correct, as always there seems to be a good bit of contradictory information out there.

    I think I know for certain that the pre 78' cars were not cat equipped, despite a friend telling me that all car makes in the US starting in 74' were supposed to have cats. I am also about 99% sure that the cams were different as well, some sites seem to state that there was no discernable difference with the motors until the "i's" came out in 1980 though. I have also read that the 78' cars were set up differently with different carb jetting and timing to lower emissions. I can see the changes also being necessary with different cam timing as well though. Also I wanted to just double check that the smog pumps were equipped in all early 308's, not just starting in 78'. I believe that the US smog pumps supposedly accounted for the 15hp difference between the early US and Euro cars. I am not sure if there were any additional exhaust differences as well though.

    Any help on letting me know if I have the above correct, setting me straight on these points, or adding any additional pertinent information would be greatly appreciated.

    Thanks!
     
  2. Tony K

    Tony K Formula 3

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    Hello,

    You are correct in that the '78 and '79 models are rated at 205 hp while the '77s are rated at 240. The main differences are that the '78 and newer models have catalysts and different camshaft profiles, but I'm sure there are other things (maybe carb jetting, other emissions devices, etc.?). I think the misinformation (i.e. regular claims of all carbureted 308s being 240, 250, or 255hp are part wishful thinking and part failure to read/comprehend correct information . . . and part eBay jockeys saying anything it takes to sell a car).

    Regarding catalysts on U.S. cars, 1975 was the first year for their being required, but there were exceptions made. 308s are one, a few Lotus Esprits were exempted for whatever reason, and I believe Mazda RX-7s were exempted through 1980 (although I may be mistaken), to name a few.

    Regarding the use of the apostrophe, most people on FerrariChat are unfortunately clueless, and it makes reading this forum a chore for people who know punctuation. For all of your future writing, it will help you to know that: 1) When you put the apostrophe on an abbreviated year, it goes before the number (i.e. '78), because the part before the number is what is taken out; and 2) Unbeknownst to 99% of FerrariChatters, you DO NOT USE AN APOSTROPHE TO PLURALIZE ANYTHING -- that includes numbers, abbreviations, capital letters, etc. So, for example, the plural of 308 is 308s. The plural of GTB is GTBs. The plural of Ferrari is Ferraris. Apostrophes are used to do things like show possession and contractions. Anyone who is interested in bettering himself will take note of this and improve. ;)
     
  3. Bullfighter

    Bullfighter Two Time F1 World Champ
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    #3 Bullfighter, Jul 5, 2009
    Last edited: Jul 5, 2009
    Adding to the confusion, Ferrari's reported horsepower ratings in the '70s are suspect, and may be optimistic. In fact I think there's a recent thread here from 'APoleApart' with some contemporary articles, one of which mentions that the output ratings in the author's 308 were likely influenced by the marketing department.

    I would still prefer a non-cat 308, but you should take all these hp numbers with a grain of salt.
     
  4. Bullfighter

    Bullfighter Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Many thanks' for posting this.
     
  5. hardtop

    hardtop F1 World Champ

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    That's a true story. Some testers at the time commented that the cars with cats were easier to launch because the ignitions were not messed with as much as on the non cat cars. Of course, those mods were easily reversed. 77s do have air pumps just like cat cars.

    BTW, not sure if cats were ever technically required equipment but as standards became more strict, they could not be met without them. I had a '78 280Z that I bought new that did not have them. I don't know what year in the US a non cat car was sold but it had to be about that time. 77 308s had a device called a thermal reactor that did heat up the exhaust gases some.

    In the final analysis, I would not pay much attention to published power figures. The 2 valve injected cars are seat of the pants slower. Carb cars and QV's have different power bands and so are hard to compare. If it were me, I'd go for 76-77 but I'm a GTB guy. Anyone wanting a spider is stuck with a 78-79.

    Dave
     
  6. wax

    wax Five Time F1 World Champ
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    There is a 12" difference between the 77' and 78' models.
     
  7. Ferraripilot

    Ferraripilot F1 World Champ
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    Many owners of US '78-'79 carb cars here on fchat have managed to yield excellent bhp at the rear wheels by setting up jetting for performance and tweaking the timing a bit with a stock engine. The '76-'77 cams are superior to tuning in general. In stock form early cams are maybe 10bhp-15 (flywheel) bhp better than that of the early cams. The difference is when you want to put more compression in the engine or dial the cams in a bit differently for more overlap etc. The later cams just do not respond as well as the early cams because lift/dur is so much less than that of the early cams. Early intake cams have .352 lift and later have .305 which is of course a huge difference. From what I have seen on here, some people with later cams are getting around 180-182rwbhp (215-220ish at the flywheel) with a healthy tuned engine while those with healthy early engines are getting around 190rwbhp (225-230ish at the flywheel). With more cam tuning bringing the power band up around 7k from 6.6k I would not be surprised if an early cam stock engine yielded even more.

    If you can find a nice early car, go for it. They are great. The '76-'77 GTBs are the epitome of what a mid-engined Ferrari should be (slightly biased :) )
     
  8. Papa G

    Papa G Formula 3

    Dec 29, 2003
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    A quick visual difference: 308s after '77 had additional vents (louvers, 5?) on the engine cover that extends beyond the ones on the '75-'77 and connects the whole "vent grid".

    Don't the '78-79 cars have sodium filled exhaust valves or are they on the '80-'82 injected cars?
     
  9. chrismorse

    chrismorse Formula 3

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    78s were slower because:
    milder camshaft, (lift, duration & timing)
    diferent ignition timing.
    cats, (inplace of the 100 pound "thermal reactor"), both 77 & up had air pumps.
    Definitely leaner carb jetting.

    The cams are the killer, because of the expense to update.

    The Euros had the same ,(77) cams but were timed differently. Probably had a bit different ignition timing and jets as well. Obviously no cats/pumps and a bit less weight & were drysumped.

    hth,
    chris
     
  10. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Just go by the labling on the car itself........a NON CAT car will be DOT labeled as such, both in the door jamb (sticker) and in the engine ID plate (metal) on the LH frame of the engine compartment...

    If that is NON CAT you have the early engine specification (later parts swapping not withstanding)..

    I'm lost on the 'apostrophe' comment as it is properly used to denote 'posssesive', not intended to 'pluralize' anything......:rolleyes:

    So, all of my NON CAT GTB's cam shafts are indeed high performance profiles........and I have LOT of GTBs.......LOLOL!
     
  11. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    #11 BigTex, Jul 5, 2009
    Last edited: Jul 5, 2009
    There's a WEBER chart showing the Factory jetting on our cars by year, I have seen it, that would answer your question exactly but as many point out no doubt the jetting changed as the cam profiles were revised...

    Correct also, the comment on NON CAT cars and air injection pumps.....1976 and 1977 cars had air pumps, and the mentioned "Thermoreactor" muffler, at least until the ANSA sport exhaust was fitted, usually before leaving the dealer!

    IIRC sodium valves have been in our engines since the very beginning, back to 1975 and I suppose the GT4s????
     
  12. Papa G

    Papa G Formula 3

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    You're correct. I'm having brain fades due to the overwhelming celebration of our countrys birth :eek:
     
  13. robertgarven

    robertgarven F1 Veteran
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    I have heard that the plural of Ferrari is Ferrari, as in; There were many Ferrari at the event.....
     
  14. Tony K

    Tony K Formula 3

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    Not a single apostrophe used by the thread starter is indicating a possessive. And in your sentence above, assuming "all of" means more than one GTB, then the possessive should be GTBs', as plural possessive is normally "s" followed by apostrophe. ":rolleyes:"
     
  15. tommott77

    tommott77 Formula Junior

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    #15 tommott77, Jul 6, 2009
    Last edited: Jul 6, 2009
    One more question. What about the 78-79 Euro spec 308s? I know that most of the Euro GTBs were dry sumps cars, but what about the cams and other emission devices/adjustments? Did the'78 and '79 Euro cars still share the same cams with the early 308s? I am assuming that at this point even the Euro cars had cats.
     
  16. gcmerak

    gcmerak Formula 3

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    +10 Of course you're biased. That's the way it should be!

    Ciao,
    George
     
  17. gcmerak

    gcmerak Formula 3

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    If the word is plural as in 3 pilots, and you want to show possession then you have 3 pilots' Ferraris. LOL

    Ciao,
    George
     
  18. wazie7262

    wazie7262 Formula 3

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    What is the synonym for anal?...
     
  19. Tony K

    Tony K Formula 3

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    #19 Tony K, Jul 7, 2009
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2009
    For many people, doing something correctly -- or even precisely -- is just a matter of course. It takes little effort to write intelligently. It's a good habit. ;)
     
  20. Spasso

    Spasso F1 World Champ

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    Somebody please make this a sticky.
     
  21. Birdman

    Birdman F1 Veteran

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    All the Euro carb cars had the same cams/specs and no cats. There is no HP difference between a 77 and a 78 Euro in HP.

    Of course one of the biggest and most obvious differences is that most all '78s are GTSs whereas all '77s are GTBs.

    Tony, did I pass? (Are you and English teacher??) Now would the plural of GTS be "GTSs" as I wrote above, or would it be "GTSes"?

    Birdman
     
  22. tommott77

    tommott77 Formula Junior

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    Ah ha! Thanks so much Birdman, btw your site is the most comprehensive one I found. That finally explains the discrepancies I have found online. There are a good amount of European websites out there on the 308 and apparently some of them don't do a great job of differentiating between the carbed US and Euro models. I can now zero in my search to a early US carbed model or any of the imported Euro spec carbed cars. Thanks again, it all now makes sense!
     
  23. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Euro specification was NON CAT thru 1980, if I have it right....

    So those carbed cars will be single distributor, dry sump, and have lightweight fibreglass bumpers that snap in two, just before your ankles do......no door crash beams either.

    So those are the items that generate the fabled "weight savings', around 300# or so.

    Good hunting.....
    Alan
     
  24. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    I have three.........want one???
     
  25. BigTex

    BigTex Seven Time F1 World Champ
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    Artvonne has two....(what happened with him, Bird?)

    Dave Helms has two also.......

    Did you call Lady Vxxxxxxx about our valences? She's been gone from her home for some time, something is up......talk to Don or Tanya if she won't answer the phone.
     

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